The Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board officially declared Friday morning that the majority of graduate students at Pitt voted against unionization in the April 15-18 election.

The graduate student organizers’ bid to form a union fell just short, with a vote of 712 to 675 against unionization — a margin of 37.

The PLRB initially deemed the election results inconclusive last Friday since it still had to determine the eligibility of 153 challenge ballots — and if eligible add them to the vote tally — which could have affected the election’s outcome.

But after the University and the United Steelworkers — the union assisting graduate student organizers’ unionization effort — reviewed the list of challenge ballots, both sides agreed that “there were not enough eligible ballots to change the outcome of the election,” Pitt spokesperson Joe Miksch said. As a result, no challenge ballots were opened.

In a Thursday press release, organizers alleged that the University’s election watchers kept a tally of graduate students who voted in the union election. Organizers said they observed watchers asking voters to show their IDs and spell their names, so they could mark off voters in a list sent to university administrators.

“Organizers believe these coercive tactics were intended to intimidate voters and potential voters,” the release said.

Miksch firmly denied the allegations and said the University followed processes and procedures set by the PLRB.

“The claims made by the United Steelworkers — that the administration set out to intimidate and coerce potential voters — are absurd, irresponsible and false,” Miksch said. “On the contrary, Pitt has encouraged all eligible graduate students to get informed and exercise their right to vote and remains dedicated to supporting all students and their success, regardless of their views on unionization.”

But Jess Broomell, a Steelworkers spokesperson, said the union is not considering the results final until the PLRB rules on their objection.

“The charges are independent of this outcome, and the election results are not final until the PLRB determines if the university administration’s conduct was unlawful and if these actions impacted the election results,” Broomell said in an email late Thursday evening. “If so, the election results will be thrown out as tainted, and a new election will be directed.”

“If the objections are found to have merit, then the Board could order another election at a date the parties agree upon,” Bracale said. “If the objections are found to be without merit … then, by statute, another election cannot be conducted during the 12 months from a previous election.”

PLRB administrator Dennis Bachy declined to say when the board would rule on the Steelworkers’ objections, but said they hope to make a decision “as quickly as possible.”

In the meantime, Broomell said, graduate student union organizers are still out in the field “actively organizing.”